WATCH ABOVE: When you run into trouble on the roads, they bail you out. But tow truck drivers say their work is dangerous and drivers aren't slowing down. After another close call last weekend, they're calling for a simple change to help grab drivers' attention. Sarah Kraus reports.

At 25 years old, tow truck driver Scott Courchesne’s life flashed before his eyes while working on the side of Alberta’s Highway 16 – something that he says happens all too often in his line of work. Tow truck drivers like him are hoping a small regulation change can help keep them safe.

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It was Nov. 3 at about 6:20 a.m. when Courchesne got the call. A vehicle had collided with a deer on the Yellowhead and the driver needed a tow.

He headed to the scene and turned on his amber flashing lights in the dark. Wearing his reflective suit and vest, he started putting out orange pylons behind his truck to warn drivers that he was working on the side of the road.

He was hooking the dolly up to the damaged vehicle when he realized something was wrong.

“I heard the bang and as I’m holding the dolly bar, I look up and I see headlights coming at me,” he explained.

The metal bar he was working with blocked him from jumping into the ditch, so he acted as quickly as he could to free it.

“I had to pull it out of the dolly set and as I spun, [the dolly bar] connected with the vehicle.”

The bar ended up wedged in the side of the oncoming SUV and Courchesne was hurt in the impact. “My neck’s all twisted, my back tissues are all torn.”

He thinks he wouldn’t have survived if he hadn’t been able to free the dolly bar.

Scott Courchesne is off work now after the equipment he was working with was struck by a passing car.

Traffic fines are doubled when drivers speed by an emergency vehicle or tow truck.

“Unfortunately it is far too often a reality where our tow truck operators are either in near-miss circumstances or in fact are struck. All of these circumstances are entirely preventable.” said Jeff Kasbrick, AMA’s vice-president of government and stakeholder affairs.

They believe new lights might go a long way. Right now, trucks are equipped with amber flashing lights, similar to those also used by road construction crews.

“Blue, as well as white lights, are the most visible colours when it comes to inclement weather circumstances — which is often when our roadside operators are responding.”

Each year, 37,000 of their calls — one every 15 minutes — is considered high risk. The tow truck drivers are either working along roadways with higher speeds or lots of congestion.

While other emergency vehicles are equipped with blue, white or red lights, the ones on tow trucks are amber — and Kasbrick worries they aren’t doing enough to slow drivers down.

“I think part of the problem we have with amber lights is that it’s everywhere. And that actually creates a bit of complacency,” he said.

Oil Country Towing covers a 50-kilometre stretch of the QEII from the edge of Wetaskiwin County to Edmonton’s city limits. Don Getschel owns the company and says he’s always worried about the safety of his drivers.

“There’s lots of distractions out there nowadays and people, when they’re coming up and approaching us — they don’t realize we’re out there working.”

On the QEII, his company uses blocker trucks to protect the crews working.

“We’ve had a couple near misses. We’ve been on scene where police cars are hit. We’ve been on scene when our own units were hit. Luckily no one was hurt but the property damage is extensive. We had one truck – it took six months to get fixed,” Getschel explained.